More User Reviews:

"Thrice hopped" per label,poured a nice medium clear golden with a well formed but quick to vanish bone white head.Muted aromas toasty malt and a little caramel biscuit with a hint of "green" hop,more subtle but very pleasant flavors lightly sweet and biscuity up front with a nice drying herbal lingering finish and I mean it lingers I noticed a little medicinal quality as well.I lighter EPA with good flavor packed into it its a quaffer no doubt,I recommend it.

Nose is honey, pale malt, grassy hops. A bit of corn mash to it as well.

Not a bad beer, nothing special, but certainly enjoyable to drink. Pale malts, leafy and floral hops, apple, dry white wine, and a that same corn flavor. Hard to nail this down - it's certainly on the fringe of the pale ale category. Finishes dry.

Good, smooth carbonation, decent body.

Worth a pickup for the bottle design alone (as most Wychwood brews are). A little off in a few places, but certainly drinkable - smooth, decent taste, low ABV. Probably will pick up a few for Hallowe'en partying later next month!

Pours a golden color with an orange hue. Two-finger white head is kinda fluffy, recedes into a pillowy cap, then into a one inch disc, leaving some decent lacing.

The aroma is dominated by orange and berry accompanied by bready yeast and malt. The flavor is big on biscuit, along with orange, some phenolic cherry cough syrup, lemon peel, slight berry notes, slighy spice, and hops on the end.

The mouth is light, but shows pretty good complexity, though the grainy, metallic finish is a bit much. Rather drinkable--solid, but nothing spectacular.

Poured into a Sam Smith's pint glass. A slightly hazy golden hue with visible particles. Good carbonation. Yields a decent head of white foam that lasts for several minutes. Smells of light malt with a hint of hops. Notes of grain, alcohol and a whiff of citrus.

Tastes of light malt with an attenuated dry bitter finish. Mild sweetness accompanied by floral and citrus notes. Mouthfeel is smooth and lightly astringent. A dry hoppy aftertaste lingers on the palate.

A decent blonde ale; would be refreshing on a hot day. The aromatic hop flavours are nice but could be a bit more prominent. Worth trying if you see it.

A- This beer has a crystal clear orangish-brown body whit a strong carbonation of tiny bubbles. On top is a mousy off-white head that last and last.

S- This beer has a light citrus hops note but it is pretty clean with a faint pale malt only coming though after it warms quite a bit.

T- The light green hop bite has an orange rind flavor to it followed by a light honey malt and biscuit malt flavor. The taste of pale malt has some nice depth to it and comes through after the hops. The malt flavor has a light sulfur note to it. There is a smooth hop green flavor that finishes the beer.

M- This beer has a medium-light mouthfeel

D- Although this beer has some dry crisp lager qualities there are some nice malt flavors with some depth and a good hop profile.

This beer pours a faintly cloudy, glassy, pale golden amber (blonde, perhaps?) hue, with one finger of thick foamy off-white head, which leaves some rain forest canopy lace around the glass in its wake. It smells of sweet, honeyed pastry malt, a bit of citrus, and leafy, earthy hops. The taste is bready malt, with a soft oleo spread, understated citrus rind, a nice mild floral honey character, and more earthy, somewhat piney hops. The carbonation is quite sedate, the body just a tad on the light side of medium weight, and agreeably smooth. It finishes with a falteringly sweet graininess, some edgy hops filling the savoury breach.

Blonde, EPA, who really knows. At any rate this ale is quite enjoyable, and equally drinkable. A (baby) step up for hoppiness cause - 'cause it's Wyyyychcraft, wicked Wyyychcraft'...

Herbal and earthy hops, wheat and white pepper upfront. A faint but sweet light malt. The Styrian golding hops are very aromatic and inviting. I love the simple, hearty and grainy aroma.

A light golden malt is crisp with wheat and dried herbs, along with an earthy and simple hop flavor that really shines through. Crisp and clean, mildly sweet malt makes for great balance and has very good complexity from the hearty, earthy, herbal and dry Golding hops. Tons of complexity from very simple ingredients gets bonus points from me.

500 ml, lcbo. Pours yellow with lots of white foam, leaving some lace dots down the glass. Creamy mouthfeel, smooth drinking, middling body. Understated bitterness, nicely malted and balanced. A fine session ale.Average blond overall. Very drinkable, hopped by Fuggles and Styrians.
Had again a year later and felt the same about it.

Looks like a straw lager. Very pale gold. Loads of visible carbonation. Medium white head settles quickly to a thin film. Spotty lacings.

I'm getting a helping of diacetyl on the nose. That said, there is also some vague citrus aroma, sweet orange, with just a bit of fruity malt in there.

Carbonation seems to get in the way a bit. It's almost club soda like up front, hard to get much taste off it. Once you get past that there's a noticeable lager character to the flavour, sort of grainy as opposed to the usual fruit and caramel. Hopping leaves a bit to be desired. Bittering, but I'm getting almost no citrus flavours off it. Moderate sulfur throughout. Aftertaste leaves a nice hint of lemon.